The House of Love and Death: A Cameron Winter Mystery (Cameron Winter Mysteries)
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
Instant USA Today Bestseller
In the newest entry in the bestselling Cameron Winter series, the ex-spy-turned-English professor defies accepted narratives and corrupt local authorities to investigate the murder of a wealthy family in the Chicago suburbs.
Cameron Winter is known for having a sense about crime. His background as a spy trained his mind—and his body—for action, and his current role as an English professor gives him a sharp understanding of human nature. But beyond that, he was born with a "strange habit of mind"—the ability to recreate detailed crime scenes in his imagination and dissect the motives and encounters that produced them. And after reading a puzzling news story about a wealthy family killed in a small town in the Chicago suburbs, he can't resist the chance to apply this deductive power in the pursuit of justice for the victims.
Three members of the family, along with their live-in nanny, were pulled from their burning mansion, already dead from gunshot wounds. The only survivor is a young boy whose memory of the event raises more questions than answers. The police seem happy to settle on a simple explanation and arrest the most obvious suspect—but Winter knows that obvious solutions are seldom the correct ones, and all too often hide a darker truth.
While Winter’s investigation is welcomed by many who knew the victims, the lead detective makes it clear he not only wants Winters to stop looking for answers, but to stay out of his town altogether. Winter begins to understand why as he slowly uncovers crimes and unsavory behavior that had been ignored long before the killings, and in the process grows increasingly determined to find the real killer and expose the rot beneath the town’s sanitized façade. And as the inquiry brings all-too-familiar sins to the surface, he’ll have to confront his own inner demons once and for all.
Insightful and atmospheric, The House of Love and Death is a penetrating mystery with a plot that cuts straight to the dark heart of some of modern America’s most pressing issues.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Klavan's blistering third whodunit featuring hit man-turned-poetry professor Cameron Winter (after 2022's A Strange Habit of Mind) is the best yet. In a gated community in the Chicago suburbs, firefighters respond to a blaze at the home of psychologist Norman Wasserman to find Norman; his wife, Marion; their teenage daughter, Lila; and their live-in nanny, Agnes, shot to death. Only seven-year-old Robert survives, as Agnes ushered him out of an upper-story window before she died. When questioned by the police, Robert reports hearing the voice of Lila's boyfriend, Mateo Hernandez, inside the house just before the tragedy; that testimony, coupled with the disappearance of two of Mateo's father's guns, makes the teenager the primary suspect. Winter, who's recently begun psychotherapy to cope with his violent past, is drawn to the mystery for reasons he doesn't completely understand—what he does know, however, is that he's not convinced by the case against Mateo. He begins investigating the deaths himself (much to the dismay of the lead detective on the case) and discovers rot at the heart of the Wassermans' seemingly idyllic community. Klavan successfully deepens Winter's character as the professor digs into his own past, Tony Soprano style, and the central murder mystery remains gripping throughout. Fans of complex investigators like Thomas Harris's Will Graham will be enthralled.